Samba E Pagode Vol 1
: The inclusion of Bezerra da Silva with "Mandro É Malandro, Mané É Mané" adds a layer of "samba de malandro," grounding the compilation in the authentic stories of Rio’s favelas.
At the same time, a new generation of musicians from Rio’s North Zone and Baixada Fluminense (the suburbs and satellite cities) began experimenting. They took the traditional rodas de samba (samba circles) out of the backyards and into bars and recording studios. The key innovation was instrumental: the (a louder, brighter substitute for the cavaquinho) and the tantã (a low-pitched hand drum that mimics the surdo’s heartbeat). This made acoustic samba louder, more percussive, and perfectly suited for raucous live audiences. But the movement needed a name. "Pagode," once a pejorative term for a party or a "cheap good time," was reclaimed and affixed to this new sound. samba e pagode vol 1
Os Travessos, Grupo Sensação, Bezerra da Silva, Reinaldo, Nelson Rufino Musical and Cultural Analysis : The inclusion of Bezerra da Silva with